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Old 02-19-20, 02:37 PM   #5
SilentPrey
Navy Dude
 
Join Date: Feb 2011
Location: Texas
Posts: 171
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Wolfcat,


I think the answer to your question is yes. I've adapted the O'Kane method in a way you may be interested in:


I lock the target and range it with the stadimeter, then hit the button that sends it to the Position Keeper. I leave the PK off. Then I start the clock and wait a minute or two (or any amount of time really, but the longer you wait the less error you'll introduce). Then, I range with the stadimeter and send it to PK again. Then, I hit the clock icon on the speed selector. This automatically sets the speed which I then send to the PK. It also displays the estimated course and speed in the chat box. I move the periscope to somewhere ahead of the ship, and send the range to the PK again (range doesn't really matter, you're setting the bearing). Then I set the AOB so that the course is the one from the estimate, send AOB to PK again, send speed again, follow up with range(bearing) again, then wait for the part I want to hit to cross the wire.


So, yes, you can unclick the PK and use the crosshair as your aiming point. You just need to set the bearing, AOB, and speed for that aiming point and then wait for the ship to get there.


The other thing you might try is to offset the angle a bit in torpedo settings while using the PK and locked on. That's a bit harder to be precise on long shots but it should do well in close where the target length can cover ten degrees. Offset two degrees to forward to hit under the bridge and two and half aft to hit the engine room, etc. If you're trying to do that it would probably help to have OTC or something similar that makes sure the hash marks in the scope actually match the angular measurements.


I hope I've helped rather than just muddying the waters.


Good hunting!
SilentPrey
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